RKB Mainichi Broadcasting
RKB Mainichi Broadcasting Corporation (RKB毎日放送株式会社, RKB mainichi hoso kabushiki gaisha) (stylized as +rkb) is a broadcasting station in Fukuoka, Japan, and it is affiliated with Japan Radio Network (JRN), Japan News Network (JNN) and TBS Network. It is owned by Mainichi Broadcasting System, Mainichi Shimbun and the Aso Group.
Fukuoka, Saga | |
---|---|
Channels | Digital: 30 (UHF) Virtual: 4 |
Programming | |
Affiliations | JNN |
Ownership | |
Owner | RKB Mainichi Broadcasting Co, Inc. |
History | |
First air date | 1 March 1958 |
Former call signs | JOFR-TV (1958–2011) |
Former channel number(s) | 4 (analog VHF, 1958–2011) |
NNN (secondary, 1964-1969) | |
Call sign meaning | JO Fukuoka Radio or FouR (channel number) |
Technical information | |
Transmitter coordinates | 33°35′34.285″N 130°21′3.161″E |
Links | |
Website | http://rkb.jp/ |
The initials RKB stand for Radio Kyushu Broadcasting (ラジオ九州放送, rajio kyushu hoso), the station's former name.[1]
Station
Radio
- Fukuoka: 1278 kHz JOFR 50 kW; 91.0 MHz FM
- Kitakyushu: 1197 kHz JOFO 1 kW; 91.5 MHz FM
- Omuta: 1062 kHz JOFE 100W; 94.8 MHz FM
- Yukuhashi: 1062 kHz 100W; 94.6 MHz FM
TV (Analog)
- Fukuoka: Channel 4 JOFR-TV
- Kitakyushu :Channel 8 JOFO-TV
- Kurume: Channel 48
- Omuta: Channel 61
- Yukuhashi: Channel 60
TV (Digital)
- Button 4
- Fukuoka: Channel 30 JOFR-DTV
Program
TV
- Kyokan TV(13:55 - 15:50 every Monday To Friday)
- Kyokan News
- Watch@24
- Sunday Watch
- TEEN!TEEN!
- Mame Gohan。
- P Paradise (about Pachinko).
Other TV stations in Fukuoka
- NHK Fukuoka and Kitakyushu
- Kyushu Asahi Broadcasting (KBC, 九州朝日放送, affiliated with TV Asahi and ANN) - 1
- Fukuoka Broadcasting Corporation (FBS, 福岡放送, affiliated with NTV and NNN / NNS) - 5
- TVQ Kyushu Broadcasting (TVQ, TVQ九州放送, affiliated with TV Tokyo and TX Network) - 7
- Television Nishinippon Corporation (TNC, テレビ西日本, affiliated with CX and FNN / FNS) - 8
References
- Gabriella Lukács (15 July 2010). Scripted Affects, Branded Selves: Television, Subjectivity, and Capitalism in 1990s Japan. Duke University Press. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-8223-9323-8.
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